Abstract

AbstractGeometric modeling of Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) is a widely used tool for assessing their kinematic evolution. Furthermore, techniques based on geometric modeling, such as ELEvoHI, are being developed into forecast tools for space weather prediction. These models assume that solar wind structure does not affect the evolution of the CME, which is an unquantified source of uncertainty. We use a large number of Cone CME simulations with the HUXt solar wind model to quantify the scale of uncertainty introduced into geometric modeling and the ELEvoHI CME arrival times by solar wind structure. We produce a database of simulations, representing an average, a fast, and an extreme CME scenario, each independently propagating through 100 different ambient solar wind environments. Synthetic heliospheric imager observations of these simulations are then used with a range of geometric models to estimate the CME kinematics. The errors of geometric modeling depend on the location of the observer, but do not seem to depend on the CME scenario. In general, geometric models are biased towards predicting CME apex distances that are larger than the true value. For these CME scenarios, geometric modeling errors are minimised for an observer in the L5 region. Furthermore, geometric modeling errors increase with the level of solar wind structure in the path of the CME. The ELEvoHI arrival time errors are minimised for an observer in the L5 region, with mean absolute arrival time errors of 8.2 ± 1.2 h, 8.3 ± 1.0 h, and 5.8 ± 0.9 h for the average, fast, and extreme CME scenarios.

Highlights

  • Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) are eruptions of magnetised plasma from the Sun’s atmosphere, which propagate outward through the heliosphere and solar wind (Webb & Howard, 2012)

  • As a first test of how well geometric models can reproduce the true CME kinematics, we explore the most simple example of the Cone CME scenarios propagating through a uniform solar wind background, where the inner boundary conditions are 400 km s−1 everywhere

  • Our study aimed to use simulations to quantify the scale of uncertainty introduced into CME geometric modeling by solar wind structure

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Summary

Introduction

Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) are eruptions of magnetised plasma from the Sun’s atmosphere, which propagate outward through the heliosphere and solar wind (Webb & Howard, 2012). CMEs play a central role in the evolution of the Sun’s magnetic field and the heliosphere (Owens & Forsyth, 2013), and they are the main driver of severe space weather throughout the solar system, but at Earth (Cannon et al, 2013; Hapgood et al, 2020). Effective space-weather forecasting requires the observation and modeling of the evolution of CMEs, to predict CME arrival times at Earth, and CME properties such as arrival speed (Owens, Lockwood, & Barnard, 2020).

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